Strengthening Capacity
to Manage Ecosystems Sustainability for Human
Well-Being
Experts Warn Ecosystem Changes Will Continue to
Worsen, Putting Global Development Goals At Risk
Wednesday, March 30, 2005 | London, UK
A landmark study released today reveals that
approximately 60 percent of the ecosystem services
that support life on Earth such as fresh
water, capture fisheries, air and water regulation,
and the regulation of regional climate, natural
hazards and pests are being degraded
or used unsustainably. Scientists warn that
the harmful consequences of this degradation
could grow significantly worse in the next 50
years.
"Any progress achieved in addressing the
goals of poverty and hunger eradication, improved
health, and environmental protection is unlikely
to be sustained if most of the ecosystem services
on which humanity relies continue to be degraded,"
said the study, Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (MA) Synthesis Report,
conducted by 1,300 experts from 95 countries.
It specifically states that the ongoing degradation
of ecosystem services is a road block to the
Millennium Development Goals agreed to by the
world leaders at the United Nations in 2000.
Although evidence remains incomplete, there
is enough for the experts to warn that the ongoing
degradation of 15 of the 24 ecosystem services
examined is increasing the likelihood of potentially
abrupt changes that will seriously affect human
well-being. This includes the emergence of new
diseases, sudden changes in water quality, creation
of "dead zones" along the coasts,
the collapse of fisheries, and shifts in regional
climate.
The MA Synthesis Report highlights four
main findings:
- Humans have changed ecosystems more rapidly
and extensively in the last 50 years than
in any other period. This was done largely
to meet rapidly growing demands for food,
fresh water, timber, fiber and fuel. More
land was converted to agriculture since 1945
than in the 18th and 19th centuries combined.
More than half of all the synthetic nitrogen
fertilizers, first made in 1913, ever used
on the planet has been used since 1985. Experts
say that this resulted in a substantial and
largely irreversible loss in diversity of
life on Earth, with some 10 to 30 percent
of the mammal, bird and amphibian species
currently threatened with extinction.
- Ecosystem changes that have contributed
substantial net gains in human well-being
and economic development have been achieved
at growing costs in the form of degradation
of other services. Only four ecosystem services
have been enhanced in the last 50 years: increases
in crop, livestock and aquaculture production,
and increased carbon sequestration for global
climate regulation. Two services capture
fisheries and fresh water are now well
beyond levels that can sustain current, much
less future, demands. Experts say that these
problems will substantially diminish the benefits
for future generations.
- The degradation of ecosystem services could
grow significantly worse during the first
half of this century and is a barrier to achieving
the UN Millennium Development Goals. In all
the four plausible futures explored by the
scientists, they project progress in eliminating
hunger, but at far slower rates than needed
to halve number of people suffering from hunger
by 2015. Experts warn that changes in ecosystems
such as deforestation influence the abundance
of human pathogens such as malaria and cholera,
as well as the risk of emergence of new diseases.
Malaria, for example, accounts for 11 percent
of the disease burden in Africa and had it
been eliminated 35 years ago, the continent's
gross domestic product would have increased
by $100 billion.
- The challenge of reversing the degradation
of ecosystems while meeting increasing demands
can be met under some scenarios involving
significant policy and institutional changes.
However, these changes will be large and are
not currently under way. The report mentions
options that exist to conserve or enhance
ecosystem services that reduce negative trade-offs
or that will positively impact other services.
Protection of natural forests, for example,
not only conserves wildlife but also supplies
fresh water and reduces carbon emissions.
"The over-riding conclusion of this assessment
is that it lies within the power of human societies
to ease the strains we are putting on the nature
services of the planet, while continuing to
use them to bring better living standards to
all," said the MA board of directors in
a statement, "Living beyond Our Means:
Natural Assets and Human Well-being." "Achieving
this, however, will require radical changes
in the way nature is treated at every level
of decision-making and new ways of cooperation
between government, business and civil society.
The warning signs are there for all of us to
see. The future now lies in our hands."
The MA Synthesis Report also reveals
that it is the world's poorest people who suffer
most from ecosystem changes. The regions facing
significant problems of ecosystem degradation
sub-Saharan Africa, Central Asia, some
regions in Latin America, and parts of South
and Southeast Asia are also facing the
greatest challenges in achieving the United
Nations Millennium Development Goals. In Sub-Saharan
Africa, for example, the number of poor people
is forecast to rise from 315 million in 1999
to 404 million by 2015.
"Only by understanding the environment
and how it works, can we make the necessary
decisions to protect it. Only by valuing all
our precious natural and human resources can
we hope to build a sustainable future,"
said Kofi Annan, secretary general of the United
Nations in a message launching the MA reports.
"The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment is
an unprecedented contribution to our global
mission for development, sustainability and
peace."
The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MA)
Synthesis Report is the first in a
series of seven synthesis and summary reports
and four technical volumes that assess the state
of global ecosystems and their impact on human
well-being. This report is being released together
with a statement by the MA board of directors
entitled "Living beyond Our Means: Natural
Assets and Human Well-being."
The four-year assessment was designed by a partnership
of UN agencies, international scientific
organizations, and development agencies,
with guidance from the private sector and
civil society groups. Major funding is provided
by the Global Environment Facility, the
United Nations Foundation, the David and
Lucile Packard Foundation, and The World
Bank. The MA Secretariat is coordinated
by the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP).
The MA is recognized by governments as a mechanism
to meet part of the assessment needs of four
international environmental treaties
the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, the
Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, the UN Convention
to Combat Desertification, and the Convention
on Migratory Species. It is supported by 22
of the world's leading scientific bodies, including
The Royal Society of the U.K. and the Third
World Academy of Sciences.
The MA's work is overseen by a 45-member board
of directors, co-chaired by Dr. Robert Watson,
chief scientist of The World Bank, and Dr. A.
H. Zakri, director of the United Nations University's
Institute of Advanced Studies. The Assessment
Panel, which oversees the technical work of
the MA, includes 13 of the world's leading social
and natural scientists. It is co-chaired by
Angela Cropper of the Cropper Foundation, and
Dr. Harold Mooney of Stanford University. Dr.
Walter Reid is the director of the Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment.
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